People What I Buy and Why: Amsterdam Gallerist Ron Mandos on What Converted Him to a Life in Art After Years in the Flower Business We caught up with the former flower shop owner about what's in his collection. By Naomi Rea, May 30, 2021
People In the Kitchen: Artist Jean Shin Shares the Korean Dumpling Recipe That Embodies the Same No-Waste Philosophy as Her Art The artist's formative experiences in the kitchen helped shape her approach to art. By Sarah Cascone, May 28, 2021
People Eric Carle, the Illustrator and Children’s Book Author Whose ‘Very Hungry Caterpillar’ Sold More Than 55 Million Copies, Is Dead at 91 In 2002, Carle and his wife opened a Massachusetts museum dedicated to picture-book art. By Sarah Cascone, May 27, 2021
People ‘Creativity Can Help You Channel Anxiety’: Actor and Turner Prize Juror Russell Tovey on His Mission to Make Art Mainstream Tovey and gallerist Robert Diament have just released a book based on their popular 'Talk Art' podcast. By Naomi Rea, May 25, 2021
People ‘I Needed to Find My Community’: Solange Knowles on Why She’s Beginning a New Chapter as a Cultural Mogul Solange has big plans to expand her creative company Saint Heron. By Naomi Rea, May 24, 2021
People Painter Georg Baselitz on Why He Thinks the Art World Is Living in a ‘Quota-ocracy,’ and What It Really Takes to Be a Great Artist We caught up with the 83-year-old painter as he debuted new works in Venice and New York. By Naomi Rea, May 20, 2021
People ‘I’d Say Our Timing Is Perfect’: Why Veteran Art Advisor and Dealer Nicola Vassell Is Opening Her First Gallery in New York Now Vassell got her start at Deitch Projects in 2005. By Sarah Cascone, May 18, 2021
People The Mysterious Entrepreneur Who Paid $62 Million for the World’s Largest Painting Plans to Open a Dedicated Museum in Dubai The sale offers a view into an alternative art world where famous names rub shoulders with reclusive billionaires to raise money for charity. By Rebecca Anne Proctor, May 17, 2021
People In the Kitchen: Artist Yto Barrada on the Moroccan Soup Recipe That Sustained Her (and Other Hungry New Yorkers) During the Pandemic Yto Barrada served the classic Moroccan dish at the Wide Awakes soup kitchen. By Sarah Cascone, May 14, 2021
People Richard Nonas, Whose Hand-Wrought Sculptures Helped Define Post-Minimalism, Has Died at 85 Trained as an anthropologist, Nonas became a sculptor without even realizing it. By Sarah Cascone, May 13, 2021
People Quiz: You’re at a Fair and Everyone’s Wearing Masks. Can You Recognize These Art-World Mainstays From the Tops of Their Faces Alone? It's one of the gravest challenges facing the art world today. By Sarah Cascone, May 7, 2021
People ‘I Never Experienced Such Focus and Determination’: Jeffrey Deitch, Jenny Holzer, and Others Reflect on the Life of Eli Broad Broad died April 30 at the age of 87. By Artnet News, May 5, 2021
People Could We Love Machines? Korean Artist Geumhyung Jeong’s Performative Robots Test Our Empathy The artist builds her own machines from scratch and performs with them via remote control. By Kate Brown, May 4, 2021
People Ballet Dancer-Turned-Artist Madeline Hollander Sees Choreography Where Others See Only Chaos. She’ll Help You See It, Too Hollander’s new film at the Whitney Museum is unlike any other piece in her young career. It’s also the most revealing. By Taylor Dafoe, May 2, 2021
People Eli Broad, the Proudly ‘Unreasonable’ Art Collector Who Changed the Cultural Landscape of Los Angeles, Dies at 87 With his wife Edythe Broad, the collector built an influential museum for his collection in the heart of downtown L.A. By Sarah Cascone, May 1, 2021